VATICAN CITY - Pope Benedict is sorry Muslims were offended by a speech on
Islam that provoked fury around the world and led to calls for the leader of the
Catholic church to apologise, an aide said on Saturday.
 Pakistani Muslims hold placards and chant
slogans to condemn remarks by Pope Benedict XVI during a protest after
evening prayers at a mosque in Islamabad September 15,
2006.[Reuters] |
"The Holy Father is very sorry
that some passages of his speech may have sounded offensive to the sensibilities
of Muslim believers," said Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone
in a statement.
The worst crisis since Benedict was elected in April 2005 was sparked by a
speech in his native Germany on Tuesday that appeared to endorse a Christian
view, contested by most Muslims, that early Muslims spread their religion by
violence.
The backlash has cast doubt on a planned visit to Turkey by the German-born
Pope in November. In an early reaction to the Vatican statement, Egypt's Muslim
Brotherhood said it was not enough and they wanted "a personal apology".
"We feel he has committed a grave error against us and that this mistake will
only be removed through a personal apology," the Brotherhood's deputy leader
Mohammed Habib told Reuters.
The Pope's next scheduled public appearance is his Sunday Angelus blessing,
when he often comments on current affairs.
Bertone, walking into the crisis only a day after taking over as "deputy
pope", said the 79-year-old Pope confirmed "his respect and esteem for those who
profess the Islamic faith" and hoped his words would be understood "in their
true sense".
The academic speech was meant as a "a clear and radical rejection of
religiously motivated violence, wherever it comes from", said the statement,
which came as criticism of the leader of the world's 1.1 billion Roman Catholics
swelled.
Yemen's president became the first head of state publicly to denounce him and
two churches -- neither of them Catholic -- were fire-bombed in the West Bank,
although no one was hurt.
But Chancellor Angela Merkel and other German politicians defended his
comments, saying he had been misunderstood.
"It was an invitation to dialogue between religions," she told the
mass-circulation Bild newspaper in an interview.
CALLS FOR APOLOGY
The New York Times said in an editorial the Pope must issue a "deep and
persuasive" apology for quotes used in his speech.
"The world listens carefully to the words of any pope. And it is tragic and
dangerous when one sows pain, either deliberately or carelessly," it said.
In the speech, the Pope referred to criticism of the Prophet Mohammad by 14th
century Byzantine Emperor Manuel II Palaeologus, who said everything Mohammad
brought was evil "such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he
preached".
Using the terms "jihad" and "holy war", the Pope said violence was
"incompatible with the nature of God".
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